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Correlation between the Meadfoot Beds of Devonshire and the Siegenian of the Ardennes (Lower Devonian)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Extract
In a study of the Lower Devonian of the “Bassin de l' Eifel” the present writer established the following sequence in the Siegenian Beds (= Siegenerstufe of the Rhine) of the southern part of the Ardennes:—
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References
page 165 note 1 Le Dévonien inférieur du Bassin de l' Eifel et de l' Anticlinal de Givonne dans la Région sud-est de l' Ardenne Belge. Apercu général sur le Bassin de l' Eifel entre la Meuse et la Kyll. Mém. Inst. géol. de l' Université de Louvain, vol. i, 1913, pp. 1–175, pls. i–iii.Google Scholar
page 165 note 2 The fauna of this horizon of the southern border of the Bassin de Dinant has been made known by Béclard (Bull. Soc. belge de Géol., vol. i, 1887, pp. 60–86)Google Scholar and by Maillieux (ibid., vol. xxiv, 1910, Mém., pp. 189–220). I have given a critical list of the species collected in the Bassin de l' Eifel (loc. cit., pp. 85–132). This list has been added to by Maillieux (Bull. Soc. belge de Géol., vol. xxviii, 1914, Proc. verb., pp. 77–9).
page 166 note 1 Mem. Geol. Surv. England and Wales: Explanation of Sheet 350 (1903), 348(1907), 347(1909), 349(1912). Proc. Geol. Assoc., vol xx, 1907, pp. 78–93. “Geology in the Field”: Jubilee Vol. Geol. Assoc., 1910, pp. 859, et seq.Google Scholar
page 166 note 2 Davidson, , “A Monograph of the British Fossil Brachiopoda”: vol. iii, pp. 126–7. Mem. Pal. Soc., 1864–1871.Google Scholar
page 166 note 3 Jahrb. der. k. Preuss. Geol. Land., 1882, pp. 128–31.Google Scholar
page 166 note 4 Palaeontographica, vol. iv, 1904, pp. 229–88.Google Scholar
page 167 note 1 Hamling, , Geol. Mag., 1909, pp. 133–4.Google Scholar
page 167 note 2 Geol. Mag., 1904, p. 406; 1906, pp. 34–5.Google Scholar
page 167 note 3 This opinion has been confirmed by a recent rapid examination of the specimens from Looe and Fowey in the Sedgwick Museum, Cambridge, and the Geological Survey Collection at Jermyn Street, London.Google Scholar
page 167 note 4 This is not quite true of the western part of the Bassin de l' Eifel, where the formations are much thicker. There exist between the red and green shales of the Gedinnian and the shales and quartzite of the Taunusian, two horizons: one consists of greenish shales (Schistes de St. Hubert) and the other of quartzophyllades and shales (Lower Taunusian). These two horizons disappear towards the east and in the neighbourhood of Laroche, at the southwestern corner of the “Massif de Stavelot”, the red and green shales of the Gedinnian are succeeded immediately by the slates and quartzites of the Taunusian.Google Scholar
page 168 note 1 Ussher, , “The Geology of the Country around Torquay” (Explanation of Sheet 350): Mem. Geol. Surv:, 1903.Google Scholar
page 168 note 2 Evans, , “Devonian (Sedimentary Rocks) of Great Britain”: Handb. d. Regionale Geol., vol. iii, pt. i; The British Isles, 1917, pp. 134–5.Google Scholar
page 169 note 1 Ussher, , “Geology in the Field”: Jubilee Vol. Geol. Assoc., 1910, pp. 864, et seq.Google Scholar
page 169 note 2 Evans, , Geol. Mag., 1919, pp. 547–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
page 169 note 3 A section through the Massif de la Vesdre has been given recently in the Bull. Soc. belge de Géol, vol. xxix, 1919, pp. 220–31.Google Scholar
page 169 note 4 Asselberghs, ,“Découverte de bone-beds à l'est de la Meuse”: Bull. Soc. belge de Géol., vol. xxx, 1920.Google Scholar
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